Draw Faces!
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Draw expressive faces using simple shapes, pencils, and markers; practice proportions, emotions, and shading while experimenting with different styles and features.

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Step-by-step guide to Draw Faces

What you need
Black marker, coloring materials markers colored pencils or crayons, eraser, paper, pencil, small mirror or photo for reference

Step 1

Gather your materials and find a comfy well-lit spot to draw.

Step 2

Choose a simple head shape like a circle or oval and lightly draw it with your pencil.

Step 3

Draw a straight vertical centerline down the middle of the head shape.

Step 4

Draw a horizontal eye line halfway down the head to mark where the eyes will sit.

Step 5

Draw two simple eyes on the eye line using circles or almond shapes.

Step 6

Draw a small nose on the centerline between the eye line and the bottom of the head.

Step 7

Draw a mouth below the nose that shows an emotion like a smile frown or surprise.

Step 8

Draw eyebrows and hair that match the emotion you chose to make the face expressive.

Step 9

Add light pencil shading under the chin and along one side of the nose to make the face look 3D.

Step 10

Trace the lines you want to keep with your black marker then wait a moment for the ink to dry.

Step 11

Erase the pencil guidelines and then draw a second face in a different style like cartoon or more realistic to compare features.

Step 12

Share your finished faces on DIY.org.

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

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Help!?

I don't have a black marker — what can I use to trace my final lines?

If you don't have a black marker, use a fine-tip black pen or a dark felt-tip pen to trace the lines you want to keep after penciling and then wait for the ink to dry.

My eyes end up uneven or the ink smudges when I erase — how do I fix that?

If the eyes look uneven, re-lightly sketch the vertical centerline and horizontal eye line to reposition the eyes before tracing, and if ink smudges wait longer for the marker to dry or erase gently with a clean eraser after the ink has set.

How can I adapt this Draw Faces activity for different ages?

For preschoolers, provide pre-drawn head shapes and crayons and skip the light pencil shading, while older kids can follow every step including light pencil shading under the chin, tracing with black marker, erasing guidelines, and drawing a second, more realistic face to compare styles.

How can we extend or personalize the faces after finishing both drawings?

After erasing pencil guidelines, add color with colored pencils or watercolors, create a flipbook of changing expressions, or photograph both faces and share them on DIY.org to compare styles and get feedback.

Watch videos on how to Draw Faces

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

How I Practice Drawing FACES (Beginner Friendly)

4 Videos

Facts about drawing facial expressions

✏️ A handy drawing rule: the eyes sit about halfway down the head, which helps get facial proportions right.

😊 People can recognize a familiar face in as little as 100 milliseconds — faces are super fast to spot!

🎨 Portraits go way back — ancient Egyptians painted faces to remember people for thousands of years.

😲 Psychologist Paul Ekman found six basic emotions (like happiness and surprise) that show up in similar facial expressions across cultures.

👀 The face uses about 20 muscles for expressions — that’s why you can make so many different looks!

How do I teach my child to draw expressive faces?

Start by showing simple base shapes: circles, ovals, and guide lines for center and eye level. Demonstrate proportion rules—eyes halfway down the head, nose halfway between eyes and chin—then sketch light guidelines. Use pencils for initial lines, add details like brows, mouths, and varied eye shapes to show emotions. Teach shading with light strokes and blending for depth. Let kids experiment with exaggerated features and different styles, then finish with markers or color.

What materials do I need for the Draw Faces! activity?

You'll need plain drawing paper or a sketchbook, a set of pencils (HB and a softer 2B), an eraser, pencil sharpener, and a few colored markers or colored pencils for finishing. Optional but helpful: a blending stump or cotton swab for shading, a ruler for proportion guides, reference photos or printed emotion charts, and stickers for younger kids. Use washable, non-toxic markers to make cleanup and safety easy.

What ages is the Draw Faces! activity suitable for?

Suitable for ages 3–14 with different goals: toddlers (3–5) can practice simple circles, eyes, and smiles with supervision; early elementary (5–8) learn basic proportions and expressive features; upper elementary (8–11) try shading and varied styles; tweens and teens (12–14+) refine realism and anatomy. Adapt complexity, offer demonstrations, and supervise younger children while using age-appropriate, non-toxic supplies.

What are the benefits of drawing expressive faces with kids?

Drawing faces builds emotional literacy—kids learn to recognize and show feelings by changing eyes, mouths, and brows. It strengthens fine motor control, observation, proportion understanding, and creativity. Regular practice boosts confidence, patience, and focus. Try variations like mirror self-portraits, emotion charades, or mixed-media (watercolor washes with pencil faces) to keep it fun. It’s a low-cost, screen-free way to encourage conversation about emotions.
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